Endolymphatic hydrops and Ménière's disease: a lesion meta-analysis
- PMID: 25236508
- DOI: 10.1017/S0022215114001972
Endolymphatic hydrops and Ménière's disease: a lesion meta-analysis
Abstract
Objective: To determine whether the distribution of membrane lesions associated with Ménière's disease is random, as might be expected from a pervasive process such as hydrops, or orderly, as might be expected if membrane resistance is graded.
Method: A meta-analysis of temporal bone reports on 184 specimens demonstrating endolymphatic hydrops was undertaken to determine membrane lesion evolution and distribution.
Results: Lesion distribution was found to be orderly and cochleocentric. No random scattershot lesions were reported in any study. Disease always started in the cochlear apex, even in non-symptomatic cases, and then involved the saccule, utricle, ampullae and canal system in that precise sequence as the disease progressed.
Conclusion: The orderly lesion progression in the otopathology associated with Ménière's disease suggests that the hydropic process has a graded non-random effect on the labyrinth. These findings suggest a pathological staging system that may be useful in temporal bone evaluation.
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